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Defamation lawsuit filed by ‘Windy City Rehab’ co-host dismissed by Cook County judgeMitch Dudekon July 15, 2021 at 4:47 pm

Go west, young man.

It was the legal opinion of a Cook County judge who dismissed a defamation suit filed by former “Windy City Rehab” co-host Donovan Eckhardt against showrunners on the grounds that Eckhardt’s contract called for legal disputes to be settled in a California courtroom.

Eckhardt’s attorney, Daniel Hogan, had argued it would be overly burdensome for witnesses in Illinois to travel to the West Coast to participate in legal proceedings.

But Judge Patricia O’Brien Sheahan, in a decision handed down Friday, rejected the argument, pointing to other options such as videotaped testimony that would allow remote participation.

Hogan hopes to have the decision overturned and filed an appeal Monday.

In an email, Hogan declined to answer questions, including whether Eckhardt would seek to file suit in California if the appeal is unsuccessful.

The lawsuit, which was filed in January, sought more than $2.2 million in damages.

It claims the people behind the show, through a process of selective editing, falsely portrayed Eckhardt as an untrustworthy “villain” who stole money from accounts he shared with his co-host, Alison Victoria.

The ploy was an effort to boost ratings, according to the lawsuit.

A key issue in the suit was Eckhardt’s contract, which gave producers “the unlimited right to cut, edit, add to, subtract and omit from, adapt, change, arrange, rearrange or otherwise modify” footage.

However, Sheahan did not weigh in on the merits of the defamation claim and whether emotional distress was intentionally inflicted on Eckhardt.

“The extent to which defendants were granted license to manipulate the footage and facts in producing the show” is still left to be determined, she said.

Eckhardt claimed he “suffered from depression, sleeplessness, loss of appetite” and has undergone counseling for the “embarrassing, traumatic and humiliating” experience.

He claimed the show turned him into a scapegoat and a target of social media scorn, with fans commenting that he should “drop dead” and that he’s an “a–hole” who deserves to go to prison.

For months, Eckhardt bit his tongue and endured the criticism because he was essentially under a gag order due his contract which prevented him from speaking with the media without approval.

Eckhardt, who lives in Bucktown and earned $3,500 per episode, was fired from the show in the spring of 2019.

The suit names Discovery Inc., parent of HGTV, and Big Table Media, the production company that makes the show. It does not name his former co-star, Alison Victoria, who has maintained what appears on the show is accurate.

In February, HGTV announced it had ordered nine additional one-hour episodes of the show.

The new episodes are slated to air in late 2021.

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Defamation lawsuit filed by ‘Windy City Rehab’ co-host dismissed by Cook County judgeMitch Dudekon July 15, 2021 at 4:47 pm Read More »

‘Roadrunner’: A profound look at the life Anthony Bourdain savored, and then endedRichard Roeperon July 15, 2021 at 2:51 pm

The term “larger than life” can be overused but it certainly applies to the late Anthony Bourdain, the bad-boy, rock-star chef turned celebrity author turned reality TV mainstay who owned the room the moment he entered, who traveled the world in search of exotic and magical and sometimes harrowing experiences, who grabbed life by the fistfuls for decades — and then took his own life, a tragedy that continues to haunt and infuriate and confound his friends and loved ones three years after the fact.

In the insightful and exhilarating and profound and sometimes deeply sad documentary “Roadrunner: A Film About Anthony Bourdain,” the gifted director Morgan Neville (who delivered a reverent but honest look at another American TV icon, Fred Rogers, in “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?”) takes us on a journey through the last two decades of Bourdain’s life, from his star-making 2000 book “Kitchen Confidential” through his wobbly first foray into reality TV through his whirlwind years of starring in such shows as “A Cook’s Tour,” “No Reservations,” “The Layover” and “Parts Unknown.”

As you’d expect, there’s a seemingly endless supply of footage of Bourdain, either through clips of his shows or off-camera outtakes, as he seemed to spend much of the 2000s and 2010s being filmed. (He traveled some 250 days a year.) “Roadrunner” also includes invaluable interviews with Bourdain’s longtime producing partners, as well as friends such as musicians John Lurie and Alison Mosshart, chef David Chang, artist David Choe and Bourdain’s second wife, Ottavia Busia, all of whom are still reeling from the loss of their friend and in some cases still angry at Bourdain for leaving without so much as a note. (“He committed suicide, the f—ing ass—-,” says one friend.)

“Roadrunner” details how Bourdain, who was executive chef at Brasserie Les Halles in Manhattan, wrote a long email to a friend about his adventures in the kitchen, and the friend showed it to his wife, who was a publisher — which led to the publication of the bestselling “Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly” (2000). Just like that, the ruggedly handsome, authentically honest, telegenic Bourdain was on Oprah’s couch and was getting recognized on the streets of New York and was embarking on a television career that would take him to locales around the world as he fearlessly sampled warthog, goose intestines, sheep testicles, pig neck bones, bile soup and even the still-beating heart of a cobra — but these were not “Fear Factor”-type endeavors. Wherever Bourdain traveled, he had an insatiable curiosity about not just the cuisine but the culture and the people. He was our tour guide on an amazing, seemingly nonstop journey.

This was the double-edged sword in Bourdain’s life. As the documentary makes clear, Bourdain, who battled heroin addiction in his younger days, was a thrill-seeker, an obsessive personality, who always seemed to be in search of the next amazing experience, the next high, the next unforgettable adventure. There are glimpses of some rare moments of quiet domesticity, when he was married to Ottavia Busia and they had a daughter and we see Bourdain fussing over a backyard barbecue like a regular suburban dad — but it was only a matter of time before he’d be on the road again, seeking to soothe his restless spirit.

The last segments of “Roadrunner” are devoted in large part to Bourdain’s relationship with the actress Asia Argento, and Bourdain voicing his support for Argento after she spoke out about being allegedly raped by Harvey Weinstein. Bourdain was over the moon about Argento — and devastated when the relationship fell apart. (Not that “Roadrunner” ascribes blame on Argento for Bourdain’s suicide. As one interview subject says plainly, Bourdain was responsible for his decision.) Anyone who was close to Bourdain knew he battled demons, and one can always wonder if one should have spotted warning signs, but as is almost always the case with a suicide, there’s no concrete WHY. Anthony Bourdain was a brilliant, passionate, troubled man who had tremendous curiosity about food, about places, about people. We are lucky he shared so much of that on camera for so many years.

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‘Roadrunner’: A profound look at the life Anthony Bourdain savored, and then endedRichard Roeperon July 15, 2021 at 2:51 pm Read More »

Over 30 dead, dozens missing in heavy floods in EuropeAssociated Presson July 15, 2021 at 3:41 pm

BERLIN — More than 30 people have died and dozens were missing Thursday in Germany and Belgium as heavy flooding turned streams and streets into raging torrents that swept away cars and caused houses to collapse.

Recent storms across parts of western Europe made rivers and reservoirs burst their banks, triggering flash floods overnight after the saturated soil couldn’t absorb any more water.

“I grieve for those who have lost their lives in this disaster,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said during a visit to Washington, expressing shock at the scope of the flooding. “We still don’t know the number. But it will be many.”

She pledged that everything would be done to find those still missing, adding: “‘Heavy rain and flooding’ doesn’t capture what happened.”

Authorities in the western German region of Euskirchen reported eight deaths from the floods. Rescue operations were hampered by phone and internet outages in parts of the county, southwest of Cologne.

Police said 18 people died in Ahrweiler county, south of Euskirchen. Up to 70 people were reported missing after several homes collapsed in the village of Schuld in the Eifel, a volcanic region of rolling hills and small valleys.

Many villages were reduced to rubble as old brick and timber houses couldn’t withstand the sudden rush of water, often carrying trees and other debris as it gushed through narrow streets.

Dozens of people had to be rescued from the roofs of their houses with inflatable boats and helicopters. Germany deployed hundreds of soldiers to assist.

“There are people dead, there are people missing, there are many who are still in danger,” the governor of Rhineland-Palatinate state, Malu Dreyer, told the regional parliament. “We have never seen such a disaster. It’s really devastating.”

In Belgium, the Vesdre River overflowed its banks and sent water churning through the streets of Pepinster, near Liege.

“Several homes have collapsed,” Mayor Philippe Godin told RTBF network. It was unclear whether everyone had been able to escape unhurt.

Belgian media reported four deaths in eastern Verviers. Major highways were inundated in southern and eastern parts of the country, and the railway said all trains were halted.

European Union Commission President Ursula von der Leyen pledged to help, tweeting: “My thoughts are with the families of the victims of the devastating floods in Belgium, Germany, Luxembourg and the Netherlands and those who have lost their homes.”

The full extent of the damage was still unclear, with many villages cut off by floods and landslides that made roads impassable. Videos on social media showed cars floating down streets and houses partially collapsed.

Many of the dead were only discovered after floodwaters receded. Police said four people died in separate incidents after their basements were flooded in Cologne, Kamen and Wuppertal.

Authorities in the Rhine-Sieg county south of Cologne ordered the evacuation of several villages below the Steinbachtal reservoir amid fears a dam could break.

Two firefighters died in rescue operations in North-Rhine Westphalia, Germany’s most populous state.

Gov. Armin Laschet paid tribute to them and pledged swift help for those affected.

“We don’t know the extent of the damage yet, but we won’t leave the communities, the people affected alone,” he said during a visit to the flood-hit city of Hagen.

Laschet, a conservative who is running to succeed Merkel as chancellor in this fall’s election, said the unusually heavy storms and an earlier heat wave could be linked to climate change.

Political opponents have criticized Laschet, the son of a miner, for supporting the region’s coal industry and hampering the expansion of wind power during his tenure.

Stefan Rahmstorf, a professor of ocean physics at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, said it was unclear whether the extreme rainfall seen in Germany was a direct result of planetary warming.

“But one can state that such events are becoming more frequent due to global warming,” he told The Associated Press, noting that warmer air can absorb more water vapor that eventually falls as rain.

“The increase in heavy rain and decrease in days with weak rain is now also clearly seen in observational data, especially in the mid-northern latitudes, which includes Germany,” Rahmstorf said.

The weakening of the summer circulation of the atmosphere, causing longer-lasting weather patterns such as heat waves or continuous rain, might also play a role, he added.

Rainfall eased later Thursday across Germany, although water levels on the Mosel and Rhine rivers were expected to continue rising.

Authorities in the southern Dutch town of Valkenburg, near the German and Belgian borders, evacuated a care home and a hospice overnight amid flooding that turned the tourist town’s main street into a river, Dutch media reported.

The Dutch government sent about 70 troops to the southern province of Limburg late Wednesday to help with evacuations and filling sandbags.

A section of one of the country’s busiest highways was closed due to rising water and Dutch media showed a group of tourists being rescued from a hotel window with the help of an earth mover.

In northeastern France, heavy rains flooded vegetable fields, many homes and a World War I museum in Romagne-sous-Montfaucon. Firefighters evacuated people from campgrounds around the town of Fresnes-en-Woevre, according to the local firefighter service. Bastille Day fireworks were canceled in some small towns.

The Aire River rose to its highest levels in 30 years in some areas, according to local newspaper L’Est Republicain.

The equivalent of two months of rain has fallen in some areas over two days, according to the French national weather service, with flood warnings issued for 10 regions. No injuries or deaths have been reported, but forecasters warned of mudslides and more rain on Friday.

A train route to Luxembourg was disrupted, and firefighters evacuated dozens of people near the Luxembourg-German border and in the Marne region, according to broadcaster France Bleu.

Associated Press writers Raf Casert in Brussels, Angela Charlton in Paris, Jan M. Olsen in Copenhagen and Mike Corder in The Hague contributed.

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Over 30 dead, dozens missing in heavy floods in EuropeAssociated Presson July 15, 2021 at 3:41 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears: 3 things Anthony Miller must prove in training campDominique Blantonon July 15, 2021 at 3:30 pm

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Chicago Bears: 3 things Anthony Miller must prove in training campDominique Blantonon July 15, 2021 at 3:30 pm Read More »

Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Leeper extends no-hit streak to 15.2 innings; Roberts extends shutout streak; Howard homerson July 15, 2021 at 3:29 pm

Cubs Den

Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Leeper extends no-hit streak to 15.2 innings; Roberts extends shutout streak; Howard homers

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Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Leeper extends no-hit streak to 15.2 innings; Roberts extends shutout streak; Howard homerson July 15, 2021 at 3:29 pm Read More »

Lawyer for man found with guns in Chicago downtown hotel accuses mayor, top cop of sensationalizing arrest without any evidence of possible mass attackMatthew Hendricksonon July 15, 2021 at 2:28 pm

The Iowa auto mechanic arrested in a downtown Chicago hotel room with a rifle, scope and pistol was in town to propose to his girlfriend over the Fourth of July weekend, not to launch a mass attack as the mayor and top cop have suggested, his lawyer insisted Wednesday.

“This baseless accusation against Mr. (Keegan) Casteel spurred sensational media coverage, despite the dearth of evidence that our client had any ill intent,” said Loop attorney Jonathan M. Brayman.

“Mr. Casteel did have a plan for the Fourth of July — to travel to the city of Chicago to propose to his girlfriend on the Ferris wheel at Navy Pier that evening,” he added.

This is the first public comment from Casteel since he was arrested July 4, when a housekeeper at Hotel W led police to room 1208, where officers found a loaded semi-automatic rifle with a laser scope, five ammunition clips and a loaded .45-caliber handgun.

Both Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Police Supt. David Brown have said Casteel may have intended to fire on Navy Pier crowds from his hotel window, though prosecutors have yet to offer any proof of such plans.

Brayman said his client is licensed to have the guns and was merely possessing his Second Amendment rights. They suggested the weapons made Casteel feel safer in a crime-ridden city.

“The fact that good people feel the need to arm themselves when traveling to Chicago is the real problem that our public officials need to address,” he said. “In Mr. Casteel’s case, there was nothing nefarious afoot.”

Brayman suggested that both the mayor and the superintendent purposely sensationalized the arrest to draw attention from the city’s rising violence.

Brown announced the arrest two days after it was made, during a news conference where he was questioned about one of the most violent Fourth of July weekends in years, with over 100 people shot, including 13 children.

“While the superintendent and other public officials have made Mr. Casteel a scapegoat in the face of widespread violence and actual shootings in the city of Chicago, he is nothing more than a law-abiding person exercising his Second Amendment Rights,” Brayman said.

Casteel, 32, has so far been charged with two felony counts of aggravated unlawful use of a weapon, though prosecutors said Wednesday a grand jury will review the case.

In the meantime, he has been released on a relatively low $10,000 bond after a judge reminded him that gun laws in Chicago are different than in Iowa.

After leaving Cook County Jail on July 7, Casteel walked up to an SUV and knelt in front of his girlfriend, who had just gotten out of the driver’s seat. He held a ring and proposed, and they drove off.

The judge allowed Casteel to return to his home near Des Moines, where he has run an auto garage since the fall of 2019.

Since his arrest, Casteel’s mugshot has been carried by media around the world along with the accusations from the mayor and the police superintendent.

Brown, during his news conference, noted that Casteel’s hotel room overlooked a portion of the Ohio Street Beach along Lake Michigan and Navy Pier.

Brown said the housekeeper who tipped off police “likely prevented a tragedy from happening,” adding, “Thank God for that hotel worker who saw something, and said something, and I believe averted disaster.”

Brown, and later the mayor, noted that Casteel was interviewed by the “joint terrorism task force” in Chicago.

Though no terrorism-related charges were filed, Lightfoot described the guns found in the room as “weapons of war.”

“Because he was charged with mere possession and legally, here in our city, the charges weren’t of the type that he could have been held,” she complained hours after Brown’s news conference. “But luckily, he was questioned by the joint terrorism task force. He is now under radar screening of the FBI.”

As described in the police report, officers found a PTR 91 semi-automatic rifle with a .308-caliber round in the chamber. It was fitted with a “laser and high-powered” scope.

There were also five ammunition clips with an “unknown amount” of ammunition, and an HK USP Tactical pistol with an “unknown amount of .45-caliber rounds.”

The housekeeper spotted the guns near a window “in a very suspicious position,” Brown told reporters, without elaborating.

But as the police report also notes, there is nothing suspicious in Casteel’s background: No outstanding arrest warrants, no investigative alerts, no threats on social media. He was neither on parole nor on probation.

Contributing: Stefano Esposito

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Lawyer for man found with guns in Chicago downtown hotel accuses mayor, top cop of sensationalizing arrest without any evidence of possible mass attackMatthew Hendricksonon July 15, 2021 at 2:28 pm Read More »

Man killed in overnight Lawndale shootingSun-Times Wireon July 15, 2021 at 2:44 pm

A man was fatally shot early Thursday in Lawndale on the West Side — the second person killed in the neighborhood in less than a day.

Officers responding to calls of gunfire found him lying next to a vehicle around 2:40 a.m. in the 1400 block of South Avers Avenue, Chicago police said.

The man, 34, had gunshot wounds to his chest and neck, police said.

He was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital, where he was pronounce dead. His name hasn’t been released.

No arrest was made, police said.

On Wednesday, another man was killed in a shooting just blocks away. Kevin Starks, 24, was shot in his head while inside a vehicle about 6:40 p.m. in the 1600 block of South Christiana Avenue. He died at the scene.

The North Lawndale community area has experienced a spike in homicides. The area has recorded 29 homicides so far this year, compared with 18 during the same period in 2020, according to a Sun-Times analysis.

Only one other community area in Chicago has seen more homicides this year: The Austin area with 32.

Read more on crime, and track the city’s homicides.

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Man killed in overnight Lawndale shootingSun-Times Wireon July 15, 2021 at 2:44 pm Read More »

Commentary: How Chicago’s Suburbs Shape Pop CultureWhet Moseron July 15, 2021 at 2:00 pm

When I was a teenager, attending what I’ll call Inner City Rust Belt High School, an integrated institution across the street from an auto plant in Michigan, I got all my impressions of suburbia from the movies. Risky Business. Ordinary People. National Lampoon’s Vacation. The entire John Hughes oeuvre, especially Sixteen Candles, The Breakfast Club, and Ferris Bueller’s Day Off

It was an exotic world. Or perhaps its lack of exoticism made it seem so to me. Unlike at my high school, there were no Black people, and lots of rich people, so social distinctions were based on class, rather than race. Every John Hughes movie featured a kid from the wrong side of the Metra tracks vs. a sneering snob who probably lived in a Sheridan Road mansion. People drove foreign cars—expensive ones, like Cameron’s father’s Ferrari in Ferris Bueller. They were obsessed with academic and professional achievement. In Risky Business, Tom Cruise spared himself from going to Illinois by setting the Princeton recruiter up with a hooker.

“Princeton can use a guy like Joel,” Tom’s wealthy father tells him at the end of the movie, his voice practically cracking with pride.

Rightly or wrongly, I concluded that suburbia was segregated and snobbish, an attitude I’ve never been able to shake. I didn’t get that attitude from movies about just any suburbs, I got it from movies about Chicago’s Northern suburbs, which, over the last 40 years, have come to be seen as representative of all American suburbia. (My first job in Chicago was covering the Lake County suburbs for the Tribune. That didn’t change my mind.)

During the first wave of suburbanization, in the aftermath of World War II, the suburbs of Northeastern cities got all the attention, in movies such as Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House, and in the fiction of John Updike, John Cheever and Richard Yates. When Hollywood rediscovered Chicago in the 1980s, though, it also discovered Chicago’s suburbs, through the work of writers and directors who grew up there. Paul Brickman, who directed Risky Business, was from Highland Park; Hughes was from Deerfield.

In the 1980s, suburbia was in its prime. Back then, nobody with money wanted to live in urban America. Rich people wouldn’t start moving back to cities for another decade. The suburbs are often mocked as a cultural wasteland, but towards the end of the 20th century, that’s where a lot of Chicago’s cultural energy was coming from. Even The Blues Brothers, which is revered as a document of post-industrial, pre-gentrification Chicago, was co-created by John Belushi of Wheaton. Steppenwolf Theatre Company was co-founded by Jeff Perry of Highland Park and Gary Sinise of Blue Island. According to his National Lampoon colleague P.J. O’Rourke, Hughes in particular was eager to rescue his native grounds from the notion that “America’s suburbs were a living hell almost beyond the power of John Cheever’s words to describe.”

Chicago’s 1990s alternative music scene may have been born in Wicker Park, but its leading lights were suburbanites: Liz Phair of Winnetka, Billy Corgan of Elk Grove Village, Local H of Zion. Urge Overkill formed at Northwestern University. High Fidelity, the movie which celebrated that scene, starred Evanston’s own John Cusack as Rob Gordon, a guy from the suburbs who opens a record shop on Milwaukee Avenue.

Chicago’s suburbs continue to define suburbia in popular culture. The 2004 movie Mean Girls, the quintessential depiction of high school cliques, was set at fictional North Shore High School (i.e., New Trier). The characters even shopped at Old Orchard, although it was inaccurately depicted as an indoor mall. Greater Chicagoland also makes an appearance, and provides a contrast: Wayne’s World, set in Aurora, and Roseanne, set in the fictional, Elgin-inspired collar-county town of Lanford, are on the outside, physically, culturally and economically.

Nathan Hill’s The Nix, one of the finest fiction debuts of recent years, is about a young writer who grows up in Streamwood, then goes on to teach literature “at a small university northwest of Chicago, in a suburb where all the giant freeways split apart and end at giant department stores and corporate office parks and three-lane roads clogged with vehicles driven by the parents who send their children to Samuel’s school.” (That sounds a lot like Harper College in Palatine.) The Nix allowed me to vicariously experience the 1980s suburban adolescence I never had, depicted much more realistically than in a John Hughes movie.

This fall, Jonathan Franzen, who was born in Western Springs, is coming out with Crossroads, the first volume in his “A Key to All Mythologies” trilogy. Publishers Weekly calls it “a sweeping and masterly examination of the shifting culture of early 1970s America.” Where better to examine that culture than “the small Illinois town of New Prospect”—a suburb of Chicago.

In the early 20th Century, novelists who wanted to capture America in all its complexity set their stories in Chicago: Frank Norris’s The Pit, Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle, Willa Cather’s The Song of the Lark. In the early 21st Century, they’re turning to Chicago’s suburbs.

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Commentary: How Chicago’s Suburbs Shape Pop CultureWhet Moseron July 15, 2021 at 2:00 pm Read More »

The Irish Oak is Hosting ‘Joke at the Oak’ Comedy Showcase to Benefit Chicago Gateway Green This FridayBrian Lendinoon July 15, 2021 at 1:28 pm

This Friday, one of Chicago’s most important community missions and one of Wrigley’s most iconic watering holes are teaming up to host the Joke at the Oak Comedy Showcase.

Chicago Gateway Green is a non-profit, public-private partnership dedicated to the greening and beautification of Chicago’s expressways, gateways and neighborhoods through landscape enhancement, litter and graffiti removal and the installation of public art.

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Chicago Gateway Green developed the Expressway Partnership program, joining the City of Chicago, the State of Illinois and Chicago’s corporate community to transform the city’s expressways into beautifully-landscaped parkways. More than 100 gardens comprise the Program, covering almost 150 acres of roadside landscapes on all major expressways leading into and out of the city. Each garden is carefully planned using native shrubs, trees, and perennials that require fewer resources and are well adapted to the harsh roadside growing conditions. We work closely with professional landscape crews to provide plant care, weed control, mowing, and litter pickup from April through October to ensure our gardens always look their best! Look for our signature Oak Leaf signs along the expressways.

Joke at the Oak was started December 12, 2018 as an open mic to give rising comedians a chance to compete for featured and headlining sets Wednesdays, and to participate in our charity showcases Fridays.

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To get your tickets to this Friday’s event, head to Gateway Green’s website. Ticket prices are $25 for general admission this Friday, July 15, 2021 from 7pm-9pm.

Pat Treuer, Colorado raised, started doing stand up when he was a young man at 23. After his first show he knew that comedy and making lives better one laugh at a time was his true dream. As a young comedian there was one show that didn’t go quite as well and left him feeling discouraged and doubting himself. At that point he chose to walk down the path of corporate life. After 13 years of working for money instead of happiness he realized something was missing. It was time to get back on the horse, and back to doing what he loves. Pat decided to quit his job and put everything he has into his dream, being a comedian.

Knowing the struggle for up and comers, he was inspired to start his own weekly show at his favorite bar in Chicago, The Irish Oak. He has since then encouraged and inspired many new comedians to not be afraid to follow their dreams. Not only is Pat genuine and kind, he is pretty hilarious. Every week Joke at the Oak gets better and better, and every week another funny human with a dream gets the confidence to do what they love.

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Featured Image Credit: The Irish Oak on Facebook

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The Irish Oak is Hosting ‘Joke at the Oak’ Comedy Showcase to Benefit Chicago Gateway Green This FridayBrian Lendinoon July 15, 2021 at 1:28 pm Read More »